Experts pinpoint best cancer treatments
11/7/2006 Washington, D.C. Christine Dell'Amore United Press International (www.upi.com) A series of new international studies on cancer therapies has identified treatments that may improve survival and limit harm to patients, researchers reported Monday. A phase-III randomized trial in Canada has suggested the use of "intensity modulated radiation therapy," or IMRT, reduces more painful side effects than the traditional form of radiation for women with breast cancer. "This is the first study that proves all the investment we've done in new technology has translated into a patient benefit," said researcher Dr. Jean-Philippe Pignol, an associate professor at the University of Toronto. Pignol and other researchers presented their preliminary findings during a news briefing at the American Society for Therapeutic Radiology & Oncology, or ASTRO, meeting in Philadelphia. All of the research presented was preliminary, meaning it has not been peer-reviewed and may change. Most women who get breast cancer will have surgery followed by radiation. But the standard radiation technique for breast cancer, called the wedge compensation technique, can cause painful skin irritation and burns along the breast and the breast crease, most often in women with large breasts. The burns can be severe enough to reduce quality of life, Pignol said. In the trial of 358 patients, Pignol and colleagues assigned patients to either the standard treatment or an intervention of IMRT. In the study, 50 percent of the women had burns resulting from treatment. Pignol found IMRT, which is able to deliver a high dose of radiation directly to [...]